Formal Constitutional Review of the Legislative Process:
An Obvious Accommodation or an Innovation
for Democracy? Cover Image

Formal Constitutional Review of the Legislative Process: An Obvious Accommodation or an Innovation for Democracy?
Formal Constitutional Review of the Legislative Process: An Obvious Accommodation or an Innovation for Democracy?

Author(s): Dri Utari Christina Rachmawati, Zendy Wulan Ayu Widhi Prameswari, Ekawestri Prajwalita Widiati
Subject(s): Law, Constitution, Jurisprudence, Constitutional Law
Published by: Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Gdańskiego

Summary/Abstract: Under the Indonesian constitution, the Constitutional Court exercises the power to review lawsagainst the constitution. For the first time since its establishment in 2003, the ConstitutionalCourt recently addressed not only the norms of the law but also undertook a judicial reviewof the procedure of law-making through court decree number 91/PUU-XVIII/2020. The ConstitutionalCourt affirmed that Law Number 11 of 2020 concerning Job Creation (Omnibus Law)was formally flawed in its legislative process. The Court stated that the Job Creation Law wasconditionally unconstitutional because the omnibus law infringed upon the principle of meaningfulparticipation. Therefore, the House of Representatives (DPR) and the Government mustrevise it by the procedures for establishing the applicable law within a maximum period of twoyears. This article finds that the Constitutional Court’s decision to review the procedural aspectsof law-making indicates the development of a discourse on the protection of procedural rights.This is an innovation in the perspective of the development of the rule of law and democracyin Indonesia although the decision creates a difficult situation for lawmakers to interpret andimplement.

  • Issue Year: 4/2022
  • Issue No: 56
  • Page Range: 42-53
  • Page Count: 12
  • Language: English